(Bloomberg) — NATO formally signed off on plans to bring Sweden and Finland into the defense alliance, moving a step closer to bolstering its eastern front against Russia following the invasion of Ukraine.
Turkey joined its allies in signing the accession protocols while renewing its threat to block the expansion if the two Nordic nations don’t extradite people it considers terrorists. The expansion must be ratified by the parliaments of each of the 30 member nations, a process that can take many months.
“This is an historic day,” said NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg. “Russia has shattered peace in Europe, so it’s important we stand together at this important time.”
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Key Developments
- Natural Gas Soars 700%, Becoming Driving Force in New Cold War
- Turkey Renews Threat to Veto Sweden and Finland’s NATO Bids
- Russian Tycoon Potanin to Start Nornickel-Rusal Merger Talks
- UniCredit Mulls a Russia Exit That It Can Reverse After War
- Ukraine Estimates Immediate Funding Needs of Up to $65 Billion
- WNBA Star Griner Pleads With Biden to Get Her Out of Russia: AP
On the Ground
With Lysychansk under its control, Russia is switching its focus farther west into Donetsk, intensifying shelling of the region, according to Ukrainian officials. Fighting continues on the Bakhmut axis, which has emerged as a new flashpoint. Ukrainian forces repelled a Russian assault close to Slovyansk, the Ukrainian General Staff said, with the city’s mayor urging residents to evacuate as the front line moves closer. Russia fired seven missiles further west toward Dnipropetrovsk overnight, six of which were shot down by Ukrainian forces, Valentyn Reznichenko, the head of the regional government, said on his Telegram account.
(All times CET)
Donetsk Regional Governor Urges Locals to Evacuate (9:10 p.m.)
Regional Governor Pavlo Kyrylenko urged people who remain in the eastern Ukrainian towns of Kramatorsk and Slovyansk to evacuate as Russian attacks intensify. Kyrylenko said in a nationally televised address that the Russian army was firing randomly, targeting local residents and seeking to spread panic.
“People get killed every day in Donetsk region since the beginning of the large-scale invasion,” he said.
Near Kramatorsk, Russian troops shelled civilian infrastructure and conducted a missile attack, the General Staff of the Ukrainian armed forces said on Facebook. The Russian army is seeking to improve its positions near Slovyansk and Donetsk.
Kyrylenko said he hopes as many as 350,000 people remaining in Donetsk province will evacuatie to save lives and allow the Ukrainian army to defend towns.
Kaliningrad Governor Hopes EU Is About to Ease Restrictions (7:30 p.m.)
The governor of Kaliningrad said he’s hopeful the European Union may ease limitations this week on the transit of goods to Russia’s Baltic exclave.
“We’re getting signals through various channels that they’re likely to take this decision this week,” Anton Alikhanov told Rossiya 24 state channel, Interfax reported.
Russia has warned that it will retaliate against EU member state Lithuania for blocking rail transport of goods such as steel in accordance with the bloc’s sanctions measures.
Ruble Falls as Investors Rush to Safety of US Dollar (5:49 p.m.)
The Russian currency plummeted the most in four months, pulling back from a rally that’s confounded traders and politicians alike since the early days of President Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine.
The currency dropped as much as 11% to 62.30 per dollar amid broad strength in the greenback that also saw the euro plunge to a two-decade low. The decline follows Russia’s relaxation of capital controls and its canceling a rule forcing the conversion of export revenues to rubles.
Germany Faces Limited Options If Nord Stream Flows Don’t Return (3:55 p.m.)
A key pipeline delivering Russia’s natural gas to Europe may not return to full capacity after planned maintenance this month, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said, echoing the concerns of German officials.
Nord Stream 1 is set to shut for work on July 11-21, tightening a market that’s seen prices soar in recent weeks. With Moscow having already slashed flows through the pipe to 40% of capacity, any move to withhold supplies for longer would severely hurt Europe’s efforts to refill stockpiles for winter.
“While we initially assumed a full restoration of NS1 flows following its upcoming maintenance event, we no longer see this as the most probable scenario,” Goldman analysts said in a note.
Bulgaria Seeks Options to Help Process Ukrainian Grain (3:46 p.m.)
Bulgaria’s state-owned Varna port may hold talks with operators of private port terminals to help find storage and process grain loads from Ukraine, the Transport Ministry said.
The ministry is planning to seek financial aid from the European Commission to build additional grain silos, as existing storage capacity at all terminals in Varna is 150,000 tons.
Turkey Renews Threat to Block NATO Expansion (11:32 a.m.)
Turkey is threatening to veto NATO membership for Sweden and Finland, even as the military alliance formally paved the way for the two Nordic countries to join.
Turkey won’t ratify membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization for the applicants if they don’t fulfill their promises to combat terrorism and extradite suspects under a memorandum of understanding reached at an alliance summit in Madrid last week, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Monday.
“They have to comply with this document. If they don’t then we won’t allow them to join NATO,” Cavusoglu told NTV television.
UniCredit Mulls a Russia Exit That It Can Reverse (10:38 a.m.)
UniCredit SpA is considering selling its Russian unit through a structure that would let the bank repurchase the subsidiary if the geopolitical situation stabilizes, according to people familiar with the matter.
Italy’s second-largest lender is looking at several possible deal arrangements, including one that would give it the option of buying back the unit depending on market and political conditions, said the people, who asked not be identified because the matter isn’t public.
UniCredit already took 1.85 billion euros ($1.9 billion) of charges on its Russia unit and Chief Executive Officer Andrea Orcel is seeking a deal that would limit any further pain whatever the outcome of the war in Ukraine
UN Starts $17 million Project to Aid Ukraine Grain Harvest (9:49 a.m.)
The UN’s food and agriculture arm is working to improve Ukraine’s grain storage capacity and aid supply chains, from harvesting to exports, with a new $17 million project.
The project is funded by Japan and implemented along with Ukraine’s Agriculture Ministry, the Food and Agriculture Organization said in a statement.
Ukraine is expected to harvest as much as 60 million tons of grain this year, but the available storage is already about 30% full with last year’s grain, which it wasn’t able to export due the conflict. The FAO will provide polyethylene grain sleeves, other modular storage and grain loading and unloading machinery.
Romania’s TTS Opens Danube Route for Ukraine Grain (9:33 a.m.)
Transport Trade Services SA, Romania’s largest logistics company on the Danube, has opened a new water-only transport route to help increase grain exports from Ukraine amid a surge global food prices.
Romania has already facilitated the export of more than 1 million tons of grain from Ukraine since the Russian invasion in February. The new route “ensures a significant increase of the Ukrainian freight flows, eliminating from the supply chain the berths and storage spaces in the Constanta port,” TTS said in an e-mailed statement. The port, on the Black Sea, has been overwhelmed by a jump in traffic.
Ukraine to Bring Outspoken Berlin Envoy Home: Bild (9:17 a.m.)
Ukraine’s ambassador to Germany, Andriy Melnyk, is poised to return to Kyiv after eight years in Berlin, according to Bild Zeitung, which cited unidentified sources in the Ukrainian capital. Melnyk has been strident in his criticism of Germany and accused Chancellor Olaf Scholz of taking too long to send heavy weaponry to Ukraine.
13,000 of Musk’s Starlink Internet Devices in Ukraine (8:22 a.m.)
Elon Musk’s satellite Internet service Starlink has been vital in keeping parts of Ukraine affected by the Russian invasion connected, the country’s minister for digital transformation, Mykhailo Fedorov, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV.
More than 13,000 Starlink devices are operating in Ukraine, including on the front line, and government officials are in daily contact with Musk’s representatives, Fedorov said.
Russian Imports Steady After Initial Sanctions Shock (7:56 a.m.)
Russian imports picked up a bit in May, even from some countries that have joined the US and its allies in imposing sanctions over the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine, as the economy showed signs of stabilizing.
Trade flows into Russia remain far below pre-invasion levels, but imports for the five major trading partners were down 29% in May on the year, compared with a 43% drop in April. Bloomberg calculated the figures based on reports from those countries, which account for about half of Russian imports. Russia stopped releasing detailed trade data after the invasion.
Turkey, which hasn’t joined the sanctions, saw exports to Russia jump to the highest since December.
Russian Tycoon Agrees to Nornickel-Rusal Merger Talks (7:25 a.m.)
Billionaire Vladimir Potanin, the biggest investor in MMC Norilsk Nickel PJSC, said he’s ready to discuss merging the mining giant with United Co Rusal International PJSC as sanctions against Russia weigh on both companies.
Potanin has headed Nornickel since striking a 2012 shareholder accord with aluminum producer Rusal, the company’s second-largest investor. A merger would create a “national champion,” the tycoon said in an interview with Russia’s RBC TV channel on Tuesday. Rusal shares jumped as much as 12% in Hong Kong.
Russia Wants to Send Zaporizhzhia Grain to Mideast (5:20 a.m.)
Ukraine’s Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia region has reached agreements to export grain abroad, mainly to Middle Eastern countries, the head of local occupation authorities Yevgeny Balitsky said, according to Tass.
Among the buyers he named are Iraq and Saudi Arabia, both US allies. One of the largest contracts of 150,000 tons of grain is with Iran.
Putin’s War Throws EU Vote on ‘Green’ Gas Into Doubt (5:00 a.m.)
The EU Parliament vote is set to take place Wednesday, and was supposed to mark the easy passage of a New Year’s proposal by the European Commission to include gas and nuclear energy in the bloc’s so-called green taxonomy. But Putin’s invasion — and the energy crisis it fanned — has upended that process.
Just last week, Ukraine’s ambassador to Germany called on lawmakers to reject the Commission’s proposal, warning that it would benefit Russia and perpetuate European reliance on its gas supplies.
Read more: Putin’s War Throws Crucial EU Vote on ‘Green’ Gas Into Doubt
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